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Transcript
Release the Women!: Redeeming Clash of the Titans in the Undergraduate Classroom
Louis Leterrier’s 2010 remake of Clash of the Titans has been criticized by classicists and
non-classicists alike. The plodding storyline, dull acting, insipid dialogue, and frenetic action
sequences have contributed to its negative reception. More specifically, anyone with a passing
acquaintance with the original or Greek mythology has been outspoken about the changes made
to Andromeda (no romance!) and misrepresentation of Io (she should be a cow!). Played,
respectively, by Alexa Davalos (former model) and Gemma Arterton (recent Bond girl), these
female characters have been viewed as eye-candy in a testosterone driven adventure. But both
characters are more than mere stereotypes or egregious mistakes. Whether made intentionally or
not, changes to Andromeda provide a more modern take on her, a proactive and outspoken
woman, and indirectly allow Perseus to adhere more closely to his traditional story. Io, who has
little in common with her namesake, offers an amalgamation of women of Greek myth, from
helper-maidens to mortal women loved by the gods to the goddess Athena herself. Although I
incorporate this film into my undergraduate Greek film course to illustrate Hollywood’s
redefinition of heroism and rethinking of the Greek gods, these two female characters can offer
students insight into a film’s re-appropriation of myth and the original sources inspiring it.
The audience first meets Andromeda while her parents glory in their victory over the
gods. Immediately she proves herself to be an active, rational, and vocal young woman, a future
leader of Greece rather than a daughter and future bride. She is the first to approach the
suspicious stranger (Perseus) and speaks reasonably against her parents’ blasphemy, drawing
attention to those suffering outside the palace (and later we see her tending to them). When
Hades (in response to Cassiopeia’s boast of her daughter’s beauty) decrees Andromeda’s
sacrifice, Andromeda readily shoulders the responsibility to save her city/kingdom (and all of
humanity), declaring her willingness to go along: “no one should have to die for me”. The film
deliberately removes a romantic relationship between her and Perseus; although still inaccurate
(Perseus will obtain Medusa’s head to save a woman and a city), this revision slightly distances
his mission from Andromeda and realigns Perseus/Medusa to the traditional version of the myth,
a quest performed without reward and for his family. As Perseus refuses Andromeda’s offer of
kingship at the end of the film, she has been transformed from sacrificial victim and objectified
reward/love interest to a strong single woman and future queen.
Io immediately distances herself from the original Io when she reveals to Perseus that she
refused a god’s advances and was cursed with agelessness; this Io thus is aligned with those in
Greek myth who rejected Apollo and were punished (Daphne; especially Cassandra and the
Sibyl). Yet Io’s refusal also sets her up as both an Athena figure and potential love interest of
“I’m just a man” Perseus. As the lone woman on the journey for Medusa’s head, Io resembles
Atalanta partaking in the Calydonian boar hunt as well as the well-known helper-maidens
Ariadne and Medea. Io is a fighter, an interpreter, a guide; she can lasso off a scorpion’s tail and
knows vital information, including the way to Medusa’s lair. Without her, Perseus and friends
may have been lost, literally and figuratively. She spurs him to action, not only to begin his
mission to obtain Medusa’s head but also to finish his journey alone.
Most importantly, she fulfills the traditional role of Athena known from the myths of
Perseus (help against Medusa) and Bellerophon (taming Pegasus). She further recalls Athena’s
interactions with Achilles in the Iliad and Odysseus and Telemachus in the Odyssey. Perseus first
encounters Io when Hades threatens Andromeda and Argos; as Perseus rushes at Hades (who
killed his adoptive family) with his sword, Io, seemingly out of nowhere, places a restraining
hand on his shoulder, saying “Not now, Perseus, you will have your chance.” The scene recalls
Achilles’ attempt against Agamemnon in Iliad 1. Io’s protection, guidance, encouragement, and
advice allude to Athena’s presence in the Odyssey where she helps both father and son in their
journeys. Io cannot be Athena here since men have revolted against the gods (and the virginal,
half-sister Athena cannot be a potential love interest) and is downgraded to a demi-goddess
figure, who, unfortunately, also assumes Andromeda’s proper role as Perseus’ future wife.
Problems with the film still exist, and it is uncertain whether the screenwriters and
director had a working knowledge of Greek myth. But a reevaluation of Andromeda as an
updated and modern figure from Greek mythology and Io as representative of a range of
mythological women highlights that the film has something to offer to the undergraduate
classroom and that both women are more than simply decorations.